5 Powerful WordPress Plugins to Help Prevent Content Theft

In this post you’re going to learn about the different ways in which your blog content is been stolen without attribution for the benefit of others and which plugins you can use to stop it.

The unfortunate truth of being a blogger and content publisher is that there are a select group of people that constantly rip off our content, display it as their own and give us no attribution for our hard work.

Before I go any further I want to be clear; I’m not talking about syndication here which is not a problem in my eyes providing attribution is provided along with a link back to the source.

I’m talking blatant content theft where individuals scrape RSS feeds for new content and then publish it without attribution and publish it on their own properties (sometimes even spinning it into something that looks like a 5 year old wrote it).

WordPress Plugins to help Prevent Content Theft

Below you will find 5 powerful WordPress plugins that will help you put an end to this.

1. WordPress SEO by Yoast

You might be thinking, what? An SEO plugin; how is that going to help? Well it can help you a lot!

Part of the problem with content theft is that auto blogging plugins are reposting content without attribution. The thing to remember about these plugins is that they are not being checked by a person, it’s all on auto. It’s sad to say really because this type of behavior really won’t help them with Google’s recent updates but it still happens.

WordPress SEO by Yoast has an RSS menu which allows you to insert content directly to above and below every post in your RSS feed.

The content can be whatever you like but there is specific code available that will allow you to add an attribution link to your RSS feed so that when your post is republished it provides a link to the original on your website so that search engines and readers will know who the original author is.

3. WP Content Copy Protection

This plugin is the swiss army knife of copy protection plugins but there are still a few features it doesn’t have so it would work well with either Feed Delay or Copyright Notice.

Some of the features include; ability to disable right click on mouse, disable image drag and drop, disable various keyboard commands.

Personally, I don’t have any issues with people copying snippets of content or using right click options and as a user that sort of thing can get a bit tedious but the main feature that stands out to is the disabling of image drag and drop function.

It’s usually far too easy for another blogger to drag and drop your image into their visual editor and include it in a post and some may do this without thinking and not have any bad intentions at all.

The problem is when someone drags and drops an image into their live editor it isn’t uploaded to your own website and it results in stealing bandwidth which can become a huge problem for the site owner that originally posted the image.

4. Tynt Insight for WordPress

This plugin doesn’t actually prevent content theft but I wanted to include it because it can give you a lot of insights into what content is actually being copied from your website, whether it be text or images.

There’s also some other cool features because you can choose to add a “read more” link back to the page the content was copied from. You can also add a creative commons license, Twitter username and/or a link to your Facebook page.

If you’re comfortable with editing your theme files you can setup this system by using a snippet of code.

5. Feed delay

Right now you probably have a few bots subscribed to your RSS feed that scrape it for content; if you run a large content heavy website then chances are that you will have more than a few.

Larger sites that get their content indexed within a very short period of time won’t usually experience much of a problem but if your site doesn’t have its content indexed so quickly then this could be a problem for you.

Here is what could happen: you publish a post and a bot scrapes your feed and auto blogs your content without no attribution link and somehow manages to get the post indexed before you do then search engines will see your post as the duplicate and chances are you will never be able to rank that post above the content thief’s blog.

This is a horrible thing to happen and happens to some bloggers without them realizing it.

Feed delay is a great solution for this, you can set it to delay posts from being added to your RSS feed for a set amount of time and you can tweak this amount of time so that you can guarantee that your post will be indexed first.

I must warn you, this plugin hasn’t been updated in over 2 years now but I run this on a lot of websites without any problems.

Summary

Be careful out there because there are a number of people that are lazy and like to take other peoples content. If you use 1 or maybe more of the plugins above then you will be able to more effectively protect your content but try to not go so far that you affect the usability of your website.

Oh my gosh! I cannot believe there are people out there who would even do this! What benefit do they get from it anyway? I don’t quite understand. This post is excellent in making clear the issues existing out there for us honest bloggers, and how to protect ourselves. Thank you so much; I’ll be looking into these plugins 🙂

I think some think they’re going to get traffic and in turn money at the end of it but the problem is that a lot of people are looking for a magic red button to succeeding online and people take advantage and sell them these products that just don’t work. There are a lot of myths and falsehoods perpetuated online (especially where SEO is concerned).

I’m really glad you enjoyed the post, it’s my pleasure – the main thing is that it helps you! Let me know on Twitter how you get on.

Adam Collonel, this is indeed a helpful blog. I am sure these tips would help many epople secure their content, be it individual blogging, or company blog posts, or for that matter any kind of content. In my view 3. and 4th ( Copyright Notice and WP Content copy protection) are really good options. Thank you for bringing these Plug-ins to surface. After all, web content is the King in our arena!

If you are serious about the above then I really worry, as the standard content on blogs is generally designed to perform marketing functions for businesses; Nobody writes blogs with Childrens stories, or actual “free” material, if you made something super cool and awesome, and you showcase it, you would generally distribute a version with lesser features to drive a need for a more fulfilled paid version (as done on many blogs, and why not?). Those who genuinely blog about hobbies, and I know some of them, usually end up being given freebies to blog about, or they end up blogging about, (which is product placement in basic A-Level Media). Think about it, you have performed (knowingly or unknowingly) product placement on five plugins, which will probably up-sell additional features after the hook has subtly settled into the readers mouths.

I for one, would love for people to steal my images, content etc, it would basically distribute me throughout the internet and validate any ideas I put forward…

I actually agree with you to some extent – sure there can sometimes be a benefit to content theft but their is a very negative side to it too.

If it’s straight up posting of your content that isn’t changed and you’re still referred to as the author then sure that’s great and like you say will distribute you through the internet and validate your ideas but this is something that is often referred to as “Syndication” and it’s something that myself and many others welcome of course.

The unfortunate truth is that the above is an ideal scenario but it doesn’t very often work out like this.

These include the following –

* Someone auto blogs your content but spins it into garbage but leaves the link back to you.
* Someone scrapes your RSS feed and republishes your content removing any mention of you and your website and then manages to get it indexed first.
* Someone scrapes an ebook together with your blog content and removes and mention of your and your website.
* Someone posts your none descript image on their site with no link back to you or mention of your name.
* Someone reblogs your content on a “bad neighbourhood” website with a link back to your site.
* Someone posts your content on a de-indexed website with a link back to your site.
* Someone leaks your paid content and rewrites it with them as the author and removes any mention of you and your website.
* Your content is distributed to a bunch of sites that has some optimized anchor text for a high value keyword that is bringing TRAFFIC and SALES to your website .. this distribution causes a high majority of the overall links to the page or website to be from that particular anchor text and Google slaps you. (ouch).

These are just the scenarios that I’ve thought of on the spot, and these are REAL and happening to bloggers all the time.

Personally I wouldn’t want any of the above to happen to me, and I’m sure a lot of other bloggers feel the same.

Firstly thanks for getting back to me, it’s always appreciated when someone is involved in their blog. Also I’m not saying this is not a great article (by my definition you have ticked nearly every box), but what I am saying is that if you write your blog in the right way (which in IMHO can be done without plugins) then the content becomes irrelevant to any competition or whoring out by other web-users.

In any case you may be right, but I would be much more enthralled by an article on how to motivate yourself to become a blogger 😉

This is such a great post – a huge help to me. I have a lot of trouble with having my content stolen. I have WordPress SEO by Yoast already, but I didn’t know about being able to add text to the feed with it. Wonderful tip!

I will be trying out the other plugins.
Thank you for all of your help!

Great comments.
I am going to be uploading video’s and documents that I would like to protect from download. I realize nothing is foolproof from the hackers, but are there security measures I can put in place to keep the “honest people honest” and make it tough for the hackers?

Yoast certainly helps to protect your data being stolen through feeds but as for the Tynt I have used it on my blog once and I noticed that it was slowing down my site a great deal. Since then I am searching for a script/plugin that can be executed from my host rather than some 3rd party server. Please let us know if you find such alternative. Thanx

Hi I have set up my webpage which is my photographs I have installed plugins to stop right click but when i left click it still allows me to copy and paste and do whatever i like with my image..which is not what i want on my webpage..how do i stop this happening..i can;t find a plug in that stops the left click.. any help please ?

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